Peel Region is one of three Regional Municipalities
bordering Toronto and, along with Halton Region, makes up what is called the Greater
Toronto Area (GTA). Peel encompasses the
cities of Mississauga, Brampton, and Caledon having a collective population of
approximately 1.4 million of whom over half of those are non-whites and recent
immigrants arriving mostly from the Middle East and Asia. And 47% of Peel Region’s residents are
considered poor with 4% considered extremely poor.

It wasn’t always like this.
Back in the bad old days of 1980 when Peel, indeed Toronto and the whole
of the GTA, was mostly white and stable and therefore awful places to live and
raise a family only 2% of Peel residents were considered low-income. It was also a time when Canada wasn’t
burdened with out of control immigration.
All it took was 35 years of massive third world immigration to f**k that
up didn’t it? Thank you immigration
industry! You really know what’s best
for this country.

Peel Region became reliant on housing to drive the economy
foolishly believing a growing population brings prosperity. But apparently that’s not true. Building houses and filling them with people
isn’t a good model for an economy with a long-term outlook. It’s a lesson Peel learned the hard way and it’s
a problem they allowed to happen and now have to deal with.

Their solutions are laughably naïve. They think easier access to services for the poor will alleviate their poverty woes but no it won’t. This is the solution the usual parasites in
the social service sector give because it means sustained funding and
employment for them but not so much for their clients. It’s also the career friendly answer for a
hack urban politician dependent on immigrant votes to keep her pathetic
political career alive. What are needed
are good paying jobs but there aren’t many of those going around are there? And it’s apparent immigrants don’t create
them either.

Peel Region is a case example contesting the erroneous
proclamation that “immigration is key to Canada’s prosperity.” Peel hasn’t benefited from Canada’s reckless
immigration system in the least. It’s
become a victim of it and a canary in the coal mine for the rest of the
country. If we don’t get immigration
under control, if we don’t lower the numbers, if we don’t become more selective
in who we let in then we can see the face of New Canada already in Peel and
frankly it’s a very, very ugly and a very, very poor one.